In the meantime, I’m looking for authors to write about all aspects of the home automation industry.
It will be included in the center of the January, April, July, and October 1995 issues of CAJ. If you are already a regular reader of the Computer Applications Journal, you don’t have to do anything special to receive /-/ABC. There is no such thing as “too technical” when it comes to our readers, so we won’t be holding anything back.
You’ve come to expect Circuit Cellar to get down to the nitty-gritty and tell it like_it is, and HABC won’t be an exception. We will also be looking at the commercial building control side to find out what is happening in that sector and how it might also be applied to the home. What we will be covering is home automation technology that you can apply to your own home, whether it be off-the-shelf products, installation techniques, design ideas, or complete projects. HABC won’t be just another glossy production that talks down to naive consumers nor will it cover $50,000 installations in multimillion-dollar homes. Continuing in the Circuit Cellar tradition of treading into new areas, I’m pleased to announce that starting with the January ‘95 issue, we will be putting out a quarterly special entitled Home Automation and Building Control. Thanks to our authors and readers, we can continue to bring you first-class material each month.
#Neplan deaht mask plus
As a bonus, we’ve filled this issue with five feature articles plus our regular columns to make number 50 a bang-up issue. THE COMPUTER APPLICATIONS JOURNAL FOUNDER/EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Steve CiarciaĮlcome to our fiftieth issue! When we started this as a 40-page bimonthly with no ads back in 1988, I never would have dreamed I’d see the fiftieth issue go out the door as a 96-page monthly with a group of dedicated advertisers and tens of thousands of faithful readers.